NESsT Brazil

The Amazon Basin Today

Home to more than 30 million people and 10% of the Earth’s species, the Amazon contains 20% of the world’s fresh water, and serves as an important anchor for South American climate and rainfall.

Photo: Nassif Jordy

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But the Amazon could disappear in our lifetimes.

Deforestation and unsustainable development has led to ecosystem stress, increased fire occurrence and a rise in carbon emissions that threaten the lives of communities living in the Amazon first, and the global climate.


NESsT Amazonia

NESsT Amazonia addresses regenerative forest conservation by supporting climate-smart solutions that grow sustainable value chains while improving livelihoods in the Amazon basin. The program incubates and finances small businesses, cooperatives and associations that impact sustainable value chains through bioeconomy approaches including forest management practices, agroforestry, and land restoration. 

The program puts a strong emphasis on both environmental conservation and livelihood improvements, with strong community engagement and income generation. The program applies a gender-lens approach to ensure gender equity in the harvesting, management and monitoring of forest resources, as well as in employment creation.

NESsT Amazonia operates in areas of high biodiversity of the rainforest, including protected areas, reserves, and regenerative conservation units, as well as their buffer and transition zones.

Meet Associação Comunitária Agrícola do Rio Urupadi (“ASCAMPA”). a NESsT Amazonia Brazil enterprise that produces the Guaraná seed.


Impact

+12,000

jobs financed

200+

Indigenous communities impacted

50

enterprises financed

750

enterprises mapped

20

value chains evaluated and monitoring

 

Importance of Traditional Communities

Photo: Kemito Ene © Daniel Martínez, WWF Peru

Traditional communities - either indigenous, riverine, or Afro-Brazilians - have been the traditional custodians of the Amazon rainforest. Today they share the forests with a growing number of settlers who seek to tap into the Amazon's considerable natural resources. 

NESsT Amazonia supports indigenous enterprises emerging to connect remote areas of the Amazon to sustainable markets, including in eco-tourism, fisheries, superfoods including coffee and cacao, nuts, seeds, and plants for medicinal or cosmetic uses (such as andiroba, muru muru, as well as ucuuba).

While they may not yet meet the traditional standards of investment-readiness and commercial viability, these early-stage indigenous eco-enterprises have the potential to improve living conditions and regenerative conservation in the Amazon basin at scale.

Strengthening the Ecosystem for Responsible Investment

NESsT Amazonia works in partnership with other organizations to strengthen the social entrepreneurship and impact investing ecosystem in the Amazon basin. We advocate to unlock investment-readiness services and patient capital to build a pipeline of enterprises that can access global markets and investments.


NESsT Amazonia Portfolio

Fund Enterprises

Incubation Enterprises

Indigenous-Led Enterprises


NESsT Amazonia News


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